The ale ca next.
Not poured yet—not freely—but carried in and set aside in heavy casks that thudded against the floor like punctuation. The sound alone shifted the mood of the hall. Voices rose a fraction. Laughter loosened. n who had entered guarded now allowed themselves to breathe.
Anders felt the change like a pressure wave.
Here, he thought. This is where mistakes happen.
Sten noticed it too. He leaned back slightly, massive fra relaxed in a way that was anything but. "They’ll drink soon," he murmured out of the corner of his mouth. "Watch who drinks first. Watch who refuses."
"I already am," Anders replied quietly.
Erik did not look at either of them. His eyes were on the doors.
Another group entered—four n and a woman this ti, their cloaks damp with sea spray. The woman walked half a step ahead of the others, her chin lifted, her hair braided tight against her skull. Her gaze went imdiately to the bear’s head.
She smiled.
Not impressed.
Interested.
There you are, Anders thought.
She bowed to Erik, briefly to Sten, then—after the smallest pause—to Anders.
"That’s new," Sten muttered.
Erik inclined his head. "Welco. You arrive from the south."
"From the islands," she replied. "Where stories travel faster than ships."
Her eyes returned to Anders. "They say you stood under the bear."
Anders t her gaze steadily. "I fell under it."
Her smile sharpened. "Honest answers are rare at feasts."
"I’m not here to win favor," Anders said.
That drew a low murmur.
She laughed once, short and genuine. "Good. Favor is a poor shield."
She took her seat among the other guests, but Anders felt her attention linger like a blade left resting on the table.
Sten shifted. "You feel that?"
"Yes," Anders said.
"Good."
The servants began pouring.
Ale flowed into horns and cups, foam spilling, the sll rich and warm. The hall filled with sound now—real sound—laughter, shouts, overlapping conversations that carried just enough truth to be dangerous.
A man rose near the center of the hall, already flushed.
"To the hunt!" he called. "To strength!"
Several voices echoed him.
Anders did not lift his cup.
Soone noticed.
"Boy," the man called, grin wide. "Won’t you drink to your own legend?"
The hall quieted—not fully, but enough.
Anders stood.
Not quickly.
Not slowly.
Just enough that the movent itself drew focus.
He did not raise his voice.
"I’ll drink," he said, "when the feast begins."
A pause.
Then Sten laughed—a booming sound that broke the tension cleanly. "There you have it. Even the guest of honor knows the difference between noise and ceremony."
The man flushed deeper, but he sat.
Erik raised his cup slightly, not drinking yet, and the hall followed his lead.
Anders sat back down, pulse steady.
Good, he thought. They’re watching rules now.
That was when the insult ca.
It always did.
A man near the far end—older, broad-shouldered, scars worn openly—leaned forward. "I don’t doubt the bear," he said loudly. "Bears die every year. I doubt the boy."
Silence spread this ti, real and heavy.
"And why," Erik asked evenly, "would you speak doubt at my table?"
The man shrugged. "Because feasts are where truth gets tested."
Eyes shifted to Anders.
This was the mont.
He felt it—clear as the instant before the bear charged. The point where force could be t with force... or redirected.
Anders stood again.
"I didn’t ask you to believe," he said. "I didn’t ask you to co."
The man’s lip curled. "Bold words from a child."
Anders nodded once. "Yes."
A ripple of confusion moved through the hall.
He continued, calm. "If you want proof, you should have gone into the forest alone. You didn’t. I did."
The man bristled. "You think that makes you better?"
"No," Anders said. "It makes alive."
That did it.
The hall erupted—not into chaos, but into reaction. Voices overlapped. So laughed. So frowned. So leaned forward, reassessing.
The woman from the islands watched intently now.
Sten rose slowly. "The feast has not yet begun," he said, voice carrying. "And no blood will be spilled tonight."
The man scoffed. "Afraid?"
Sten smiled without humor. "No. Strategic."
Laughter followed—nervous, but real.
Erik lifted his cup at last. "Eat," he said. "Drink. Watch. Tomorrow, we speak of alliances."
That word landed like a stone dropped into deep water.
Alliances.
The insult died there—not resolved, but contained. As Anders sat back down, he felt the weight of attention shift again. Less curiosity now.
More calculation.
The woman from the islands leaned toward her companion. "That one," she said quietly, "will be trouble."
Anders caught it anyway.
He did not look at her.
Beneath the hall, beneath the noise and politics and bone trophies, his crossbow waited.
Unseen.
Unspoken.
And for the first ti since the bear, Anders felt sothing close to anticipation.
Not fear.
Not pride.
Readiness.
Because tonight was only the opening move.
And everyone here—whether they knew it yet or not—had just stepped onto the board.
The doors opened again.
This ti, the sound carried differently.
It wasn’t louder—if anything, the voices near the entrance fell quiet faster than before—but there was a shift in posture throughout the hall that Anders felt imdiately. Backs straightened. Cups paused halfway to lips. n glanced toward Erik and Sten before looking at the newcors.
Power had arrived already assembled.
The man at the front was unmistakable.
Fergus Redbeard did not need heralds.
His beard was long and heavy, braided into three thick cords bound with iron rings darkened by age and use. His hair was the color of dried blood and firelight, pulled back from a face marked by old cuts that had healed cleanly. He wore no extravagant cloak—just thick wool dyed deep rust, clasped with a disc of worked bronze bearing a simple mark that Anders recognized imdiately.
Not a family sigil.
A territory mark.
Behind him ca his n—too many to count at a glance, moving in pairs and threes, not clustered, not loose. Veterans. Raiders who had survived long enough to learn spacing and silence. They filled the hall’s edges without being told, claiming space the way experienced fighters always did.
Five hundred, Anders thought. At least.
This wasn’t a visit.
It was a reminder.
Fergus stopped several paces from the high table and looked up—not at Erik, not at Sten—but directly at Anders.
A slow grin spread beneath his beard.
"Well now," Fergus said, voice rough and confident, carrying easily through the hall. "There he is."
Anders did not move.
"Bear slayer," Fergus continued, the words dragged out just enough to sour them. "That’s what they’re calling you, is it?"
A few uneasy chuckles rippled near the walls.
Fergus clasped his hands behind his back and leaned slightly forward. "Must’ve been so bear."
"It was," Anders replied calmly.
That earned a few surprised looks.
Fergus laughed outright. "Polite too. Gods, Erik, you raise them young here."
Erik’s expression did not change. "You’re welco at my table, Fergus. Mockery is unnecessary."
"Is it?" Fergus said mildly. He turned his head, addressing the hall now. "I hear a boy stood against a beast that breaks n in half. I hear he lived."
He shrugged. "Stories grow."
Sten shifted, his chair scraping softly against the floor. "Choose your next words carefully."
Fergus held up a hand, placating. "No insult intended. Only curiosity."
He turned again to Anders.
"Tell , Bear Slayer," he said, savoring it this ti, "did the bear swing a blade? Did it think? Did it try to trick you?"
Anders t his gaze steadily. "It weighed more than any man here. It didn’t need to."
A few murmurs of agreent followed.
Fergus tilted his head. "Fair enough."
He snapped his fingers once.
From behind him stepped a man who made the space around him feel smaller.
Broad, thick through the chest and shoulders, hair shaved close to the scalp save for a single braid down his back. His face was weathered and calm, the expression of soone who had learned not to waste energy on anticipation. His armor was worn but well-kept, leather reinforced with iron plates polished smooth by use.
A veteran.
Fergus rested a hand briefly on the man’s shoulder. "This is Haldor. He’s seen more winters than you’ve seen sumrs, boy. Fought in shield walls. Taken cities. Buried brothers."
The hall was very quiet now.
Fergus spread his hands. "It seems only fair, doesn’t it? If you could stand against a bear, surely standing against one man would be no great thing."
A challenge.
Clean. Public. Carefully frad.
Sten rose to his feet fully now. "There will be no challenges tonight."
Fergus waved him off. "I’m not asking for blood. Just a test. Wood blades. Shield and circle. No sha in yielding."
He smiled thinly. "Unless the story is all it is."
Anders felt the weight of it settle across the hall.
If he refused, the na would sour.
If he accepted and lost, the banner would tear.
If he accepted and won...
Sothing else breaks, he thought.
He stood before either Erik or Sten could speak again.
The movent was small, but it cut the tension cleanly.
"I’ll answer you," Anders said.
Erik’s head snapped toward him. "Anders—"
"I will answer," Anders repeated, gently but firmly.
Fergus’s grin widened.
Anders turned his body slightly, addressing the hall rather than Redbeard alone.
"You say it’s fair," he said. "Because of the bear."
"Yes," Fergus replied easily.
Anders nodded once. "Then it wouldn’t be."
The grin faltered—just a fraction.
"A bear didn’t choose to fight ," Anders continued. "A bear didn’t co to my ho and asure my worth in front of others."
He looked back at Fergus.
"You did."
A low murmur rolled through the hall.
Fergus’s eyes narrowed. "Careful, boy."
Anders did not raise his voice. "If I fight your man, it won’t be because of a story. It will be because you asked to bleed for your amusent."
The hall held its breath.
Sten smiled slowly.
Erik closed his eyes for half a heartbeat.
Fergus studied Anders anew now—not as a curiosity, not as a symbol—but as sothing far more dangerous.
A mind that understood the board.
Finally, Fergus chuckled. "Sharp tongue. Perhaps sharper than your blade."
He gestured to Haldor. "Stand down."
Haldor inclined his head once, calm as ever, and stepped back.
Fergus spread his hands again. "Another ti, then. When you’re older."
Anders nodded. "Another ti."
Fergus’s gaze lingered a mont longer, sothing calculating flickering behind his eyes.
"Enjoy your feast, Bear Slayer," he said at last. "Nas have a way of asking for paynt."
He turned and took his seat among his n.
Only when the noise slowly returned—voices exhaling, cups lifted again—did Anders sit.
Sten leaned toward him, voice low and satisfied. "You just refused a fight without losing ground."
Anders exhaled slowly. "Fighting wasn’t the test."
Erik studied Fergus Redbeard across the hall. "No," he said grimly. "It was restraint."
Above them, the bear’s head watched silently, jaws frozen mid-snarl.
And sowhere beneath the floor, wrapped and waiting, a crossbow remained hidden—unneeded tonight.
But the ssage had been delivered all the sa.
The feast had crossed its first true threshold.
And Fergus Redbeard had just learned that Anders Skjold was not a story to be pushed.
He was a line.
And lines, once drawn, had consequences.
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